Learning from and about cancer (chronic lymphocytic leukemia or CLL) by Dr. Brian Koffman

What started as a personal journey of a doctor turned patient morphed into a way to share what’s universal in dealing with cancer, in my case a nasty leukemia (CLL), a failed transplant and a successful clinical trial. The telling of my journey has become a journey to teach about CLL, related blood issues and all cancers. Please visit our new website http://cllsociety.org for the latest news and information. Smart patients get smart care™. If you want to reach me, email bkoffmanMD@gmail.com

Monday, May 29, 2017

We Need Your Help

Friends and Supporters,

We need your help.

The nonprofit CLL Society has prepared a two-minute
video that outlines our needs and asks for your donation to allow us to
continue and expand our work.

Saturday, May 20, 2017

5 Years Since I started on Ibrutinib for my CLL (chronic lymphocytic leukemia) in a Phase 1 Clinical Trial at Ohio State

May 5, 2017 marked 5 years since I swallowed my first 3 capsules of PCI-32765, now better known as ibrutinib or Imbruvica.

I still take 3 battleship grey capsules every morning to keep the CLL dragon at bay.

Much has changed in those five fateful years and I want to share some of my reflections on that amazing journey and some of my hard learned lessons.

I will be writing more about my story as a patient on these pages. You can get more of the past day by day blows over the last 9 plus years here in my blog that in many ways was the mother to this website and the CLL Society.

My very first blog post (http://bkoffman.blogspot.com/2008_04_01_archive.html), other than the portrait of me by my son, dates from April 29, 2008 and deals with another fateful decision, the one to have a transplant. Now with 1100 posts and 1.2 million views later, I am still telling my CLL story.

The Decision to Enter a Clinical Trial

In 2011, my CLL was not behaving. After my failed allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell (bone marrow) transplant, my nodes were growing again and became massive, over 11 cm long in the gut. My absolute lymphocyte count was also climbing, I had a mild anemia, but at least my platelets whose prior crashes from the auto-immune ITP (immune thrombocytopenia) had lead to five unpredictable and life-threatening hospital admissions were now holding steady on my immune suppressing cocktail of cyclosporine and rituximab.

I had added a small sub-clone of 17p deleted cells to my more dominant 11q deleted clone of bad actors. In fact I had developed several new mutations, more than enough to qualify as a complex karyotype. I had a very nasty flavor of CLL.

My CLL also had now clearly demonstrated genomic instability, the ability to continue to mutate and find ways around drugs meant to control it.

Chemo-immunotherapy (CIT) such as FCR (fludarabine, cyclophosphamide and rituximab) was off the table. It simply wouldn’t work due to my 17p deletion. My options were vanishingly few.

With a failed bone marrow transplant as part of my medical history, I was not only a high-risk patient, but also one excluded from most clinical trials. There is a lot of risk in clinical trials, and manufacturers want to eliminate as much as they can by excluding those who might disrupt the data such as post-transplant patients like me. This is still a common exclusion criterion.

Against this dark landscape, there was a tiny, but dazzlingly bright light. At the huge annual ASH (American Society of Hematology) meeting in San Diego December 10 – 13, 2011, there was a loud buzz about two new related therapies that were showing remarkable efficacy in very early and very small phase 1 trials in the worst of the worst CLL patients, such as yours truly.

And there was this remarkable moment of agreement between all the CLL experts, a moment never seen before or since, a consensus that we might be witnessing something special, that a new era might be dawning in CLL.

That feeling of a sea change coming turned out to be prescient.

Those two drugs were CAL 101 (now known as idelalisib or Zydelig) and PCI-32765 (now known as ibrutinib or Imbruvica).

Neither was available for me in California in a trial, but there was a trial opened in Columbus, Ohio at Ohio State University where I would likely qualify.

Clinical trial NCT01217749 (PCYC-1109-CA) would end up both changing and saving my life.

I had leveraged my position as a doctor and by this time, my modest fame as a CLL blogger, to wrangle an introduction to Dr. John Byrd in a noisy hall at the ASH conference. Within 10 minutes of talking, he had penciled me in for the clinical trial that he was running and so began our strong friendship.

I had to fight hard with my insurance company to get coverage for this out-of-state trial, but soon I had enrolled in the study and moved from sunny southern California to Columbus, Ohio for three wintery months.

I took my first three pills of PCI-32765 a little over five years ago.

In the next installment of this story, I will share more about the trial from the first days to the present, but for now I want to share a few “take- aways” from my adventure that I learned from this experience:

Don’t give up.

Think outside the box, or as Dr. Terry Hamblin would say: Think Laterally.

Leverage every advantage you have.

Be prepared to move, both physically and metaphorically, when you need to move.

Thursday, May 11, 2017

More on Steroids and an Upcoming FaceBook Live this Saturday at 3:45PM EDT from iwCLL

Hi,

I just posted the third and final segment of my 3 articles on steroids in CLL. This one is on the possible short term risks and on correlation versus causation. You can find it here: http://cllsociety.org/2017/05/steroids-part-3/

I will be at the important CLL conference, iwCLL in NYC this weekend doing a Facebook Live at 3:45 EDT on May 13, so please visit the CLL Society Page https://www.facebook.com/CLLsociety/ and join in if you have questions on CLL.

Too much travel but it all for good reasons. Just back from an amazingly successful launch of CLL Ireland in Dublin where I was privileged to be one of the speakers.

About Me

BkoffmanMD@gmail.com
A family doc and husband of 1 and father of 4 and grandfather of 3 who loves his family and his work. I live with no TV and no microwave, but wouldn't last a minute without friends, art, music, books and the beach. Hockey, good jokes and exotic travel are pretty important too. Writing, Talmud and Zen give meaning to my life. My diet is organic vegan, often raw. I hope the blog makes the load lighter and the path both safer and more fun for those who read it or are going to similar places. I want to help. I crave your comments. If you are new to the blog, check out the portrait my son Will painted (it is the first post), and my very first text post.